We should probably leave that aside, since we're not talking about anything in the the movies now. "you said this" ... "no you said that first" stuff isn't healthy, interesting, or actually leading anywhere, and the stuff we're talking about is purely meta now as well.
One interesting thing I started looking at what the gender breakdown of scores for SW movies on imdb. Women, especially young women are super-positive about TLJ. So that could be a thing related to guys have a negative reaction to the "progressivism" in the movies (a common claim).
However, on that note, I looked up the stats on the other movies, and there's a noticeable gender divide of opinion on the prequels, especially with the youngest demographic.
For example, Attack of the Clones scored 5.8 from young males, 7.3 from young females, and Phantom Menace scored 5.9 from young males, 7.1 from young females. Even "revenge of the Sith" has 0.5 higher ratings from young women vs young men. These differences are greater than the gender difference in approval for the new movie. The interesting fact is that *none* of the Star Wars movies since 1983 actually scored higher among young men vs young women. The prequels have the most massive pro-female bias in scoring, funnily enough, while the "The Force Awakens" and "Rogue One" are more equal, but even for those two movies, teenage girls gave the highest average scores. Ironically, it's not the movies with female leads which have the biggest pro-female gender divide: it's the ones with cute boy Anakin. Basically he's the Justin Bieber of Star Wars fandom.
Even "Return of the Jedi" has higher scores with teenage girls than boys. You need to go back to 1980 to find a Star Wars movie with higher average ratings from boys than girls.
Which suggests a lot of the cliches about who the "core" fans actually are for this material might be mistaken. No demographic scored even one of the 1983-2017 movies higher than teenage girls did. So casting a female lead in both Force Awakens and Rogue One might have very little to do with "feminism" at all (though anyone casting a woman is clearly going to cash in on that), and everything to do with the fact that they realize their core demographic has changed.